• DocumentCode
    2134396
  • Title

    Evaluation of binder management for partially controlled DSL vectoring systems

  • Author

    Hincapie, Daniel ; Maierbacher, Gerhard ; Achtzehn, Andreas ; Petrova, Marina

  • Author_Institution
    Fraunhofer Institute for Embedded, Systems and Communication Technologies ESK, Hansastrasse 32, D-80686 Munich, Germany
  • fYear
    2015
  • fDate
    8-12 June 2015
  • Firstpage
    964
  • Lastpage
    970
  • Abstract
    Crosstalk between physically co-located lines is a pressing issue in VDSL2 access networks. In order to enhance the crosstalk mitigation capabilities of the latest extension to VDSL2, vectoring G.993.5, full control over all lines within the same cable binder is required. However, this is not always possible in practical deployments due to regulatory, structural, or late technology adoption constraints. In these cases a technique to minimize interference from non-controlled lines, known as binder management, aims at rearranging the line configuration within each binder. In this work, we quantify the advantages of binder management in a partially controlled setup. We initially establish a model of a commonly used 50-pair cable binder and provide its far-end crosstalk (FEXT) characterization. We then carry out an extensive simulation study for various degrees of control over the lines and realistic line length distributions to yield tangible metrics on vectoring performance for downstream transmission. Our results show that binder management is of limited use in partially controlled systems. Consequently, we provide an additional comparison study to help DSL providers to evaluate the remaining gains of upgrading to VDSL2-vectoring in such scenarios for different levels of dominance in the cable binder.
  • Keywords
    Control systems; Crosstalk; DSL; Dispersion; Power cables; Resource management;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Communications (ICC), 2015 IEEE International Conference on
  • Conference_Location
    London, United Kingdom
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/ICC.2015.7248447
  • Filename
    7248447